Colorado Springs, Colo.  University of Colorado athletic director Mike Bohn said he hopes to know within a month how much it’s going to cost the school to bolt the Big 12 for the Pac-10.

Lawyers for both conferences and the university are in discussions on an exit strategy for CU, which announced earlier this month it was switching leagues in 2012.

The Buffaloes would prefer to leave after next season like the University of Nebraska, which is joining the Big Ten in 2011.

That could prove costlier for Colorado, but the Big 12 also might decide it’s better for the Buffaloes to leave after next school year and agree to a lower penalty fee.

Big 12 bylaws require CU to forfeit half its Big 12 revenue distributions for the next two school years in order to leave the league. According to IRS tax records examined by the Associated Press, the Big 12 paid out $10,135,802 to Colorado in 2008-09.

That would make the buyout around $10 million, although Bohn said the cost for leaving after one year is undefined.

“There’s some ambiguity in the buyout, so we’re trying to figure it out,” Bohn said before the annual College Football Kickoff Luncheon. “We really have a desire to come up with answers because we want to continue to fuel that interest” in joining the Pac-10.

“I do know that it is extremely complex, and we recognize that the timing of the University of Colorado’s departure has implications to 22 institutions,” Bohn said.

Had Texas and other Big 12 schools followed CU to the Pac-10, there might not have been any buyout necessary because the Big 12 would have dissolved. But the Longhorns declined Pac-10 Commissioner Larry Scott’s invitation, and so did Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas A&M; and Texas Tech.

The only certainty in all this complexity is that the Buffs will be playing in the Pac-10 by 2012-13. “We do know that,” Bohn said. “Everything else is unresolved.”

No matter the ultimate cost of leaving the Big 12, Bohn insisted the university is already reaping the rewards of switching conferences.

“We’re benefiting every day with that intensity of interest in the program that helps us with recruiting, it helps us with our donor base, it helps us with the media, it helps us with our faculty,” Bohn said.

He said there has been a rise in donations to the department since the announcement that the school was joining the Pac-10, but he declined to be specific.

Among the many tasks involved in the transition is redoing football schedules.

“We had some schedule models in place through 2020, but that will be altered significantly, potentially starting in ’11,” Bohn said.

The Buffs also are awaiting announcements on whether teams will play eight or nine league games in the Pac-10, which also lured Utah from the Mountain West Conference, making it eligible for a conference championship.

“I think that’s the most frustrating thing is as we’re gaining excitement associated with this move, we don’t have all the details,” Bohn said. “We want to continue to fuel that intensity of interest that our program desperately needs, and you can fuel it by talking about championships and models and schedules and that’s the hardest thing is not being able to share that yet.”

Buffaloes coach Dan Hawkins skipped the luncheon because he was at his daughter’s wedding.

Hawkins is on the hot seat, having posted four non-winning seasons in Boulder, where his decision to recruit his son, Cody, to play quarterback has backfired.

“I have a lot of confidence in Dan,” Bohn said. “He’s done everything we’ve asked him to do off the field, and he recognizes in Year 5, as we all do, that the expectations are high for the scoreboard this fall.”

The Buffs are celebrating the 20th anniversary of their 1990 football championship this fall and will recognize Alfred Williams, a member of that team who was elected into the college football hall of fame this spring.

“It’s a big year for Dan. We all know that,” Bohn said. “But it’s an opportunity for us to say goodbye to the Big 12 Conference potentially ... but also use that to enhance future recruiting possibilities and future growth of the program.”

The Big 12 exit isn’t the only buyout on Bohn’s plate. He said he’s still awaiting the $500,000 that former basketball coach Jeff Bzdelik owes the university for breaking his contract to take over at Wake Forest.

“We’re working through that, and I don’t anticipate any problems,” Bohn said. “It’s just kind of taken a back burner with all these other issues. But we remain very respectful and appreciative of what Jeff did for us.”

Notes

Among the attendees was MWC commissioner Craig Thompson, whose rescheduling task was made easier when Utah left the league for the Pac-10. Now, Boise State, which left the Western Athletic Conference for the MWC, more than likely will just take Utah’s place on the league schedule. ... With the Utes’ departure, Thompson is thrilled to have Boise State, 26-1 over the last two years, as the MWC enters the third year of a four-year cycle to gain an automatic bid in the BCS.

Nebraska and Colorado can both up if they want out early. The other 10 loyal schools deserve better than to have 2 schools bolt over rumors when the Big 10 saying they were looking into expansion and Missouri saying they wanted the invite. Other than Nebraska in football, we are losing absolutely nothing. Our basketball, baseball, softball, track, etc. will be even tougher than before.

Looking forward to not having to sit next to Cornhusker fans at Memorial Stadium. Out of every game at home, they were the most rude and profane bunch of fans I've ever encountered. Besides Mizzou fans at Hoglund ballpark but that's a whole different story.

They can go anytime they like. Just leave the money.
They could use a yr off to practive.........lol
What a load of crapola about them already reaping benefits in recruiting.
In ten yrs. they will stll be sucking pond water.
What a joke.